Перевод: с английского на исландский

с исландского на английский

different+than

  • 1 change

    [ ein‹] 1. verb
    1) (to make or become different: They have changed the time of the train; He has changed since I saw him last.) breyta
    2) (to give or leave (one thing etc for another): She changed my library books for me.) skipta
    3) ((sometimes with into) to remove (clothes etc) and replace them by clean or different ones: I'm just going to change (my shirt); I'll change into an old pair of trousers.) skipta (um)
    4) ((with into) to make into or become (something different): The prince was changed into a frog.) breyta í
    5) (to give or receive (one kind of money for another): Could you change this bank-note for cash?) skipta
    2. noun
    1) (the process of becoming or making different: The town is undergoing change.) breyting
    2) (an instance of this: a change in the programme.) breyting
    3) (a substitution of one thing for another: a change of clothes.) skipti
    4) (coins rather than paper money: I'll have to give you a note - I have no change.) skiptimynt
    5) (money left over or given back from the amount given in payment: He paid with a dollar and got 20 cents change.) afgangur, skiptimynt
    6) (a holiday, rest etc: He has been ill - the change will do him good.) hvíld; tilbreyting
    - change hands
    - a change of heart
    - the change of life
    - change one's mind
    - for a change

    English-Icelandic dictionary > change

  • 2 difference

    ['difrəns]
    1) (what makes one thing unlike another: I can't see any difference between these two pictures; It doesn't make any difference to me whether you go or stay; There's not much difference between them.) munur
    2) (an act of differing, especially a disagreement: We had a difference of opinion; Have they settled their differences? (= Have they stopped arguing?).)
    3) (the amount by which one quantity or number is greater than another: If you buy it for me I'll give you $6 now and make up the difference later.) mismunur
    - differentiate
    - differentiation

    English-Icelandic dictionary > difference

  • 3 extreme

    [ik'stri:m] 1. adjective
    1) (very great, especially much more than usual: extreme pleasure; He is in extreme pain.) ákaflegur
    2) (very far or furthest in any direction, especially out from the centre: the extreme south-western tip of England; Politically, he belongs to the extreme left.) við endamörk/ystu mörk; ystur; róttækur
    3) (very violent or strong; not ordinary or usual: He holds extreme views on education.) róttækur, öfgakenndur
    2. noun
    1) (something as far, or as different, as possible from something else: the extremes of sadness and joy.) öfgar
    2) (the greatest degree of any state, especially if unpleasant: The extremes of heat in the desert make life uncomfortable.) (ítrustu) öfgar
    - extremism
    - extremist
    - extremity
    - in the extreme
    - to extremes

    English-Icelandic dictionary > extreme

  • 4 imitate

    ['imiteit] 1. verb
    (to (try to) be, behave or look the same as (a person etc): Children imitate their friends rather than their parents; He could imitate the song of many different birds.) líkja eftir
    2. adjective
    (made to look like something else: imitation wood.) gervi-, óekta-, -líki
    - imitativeness
    - imitator

    English-Icelandic dictionary > imitate

  • 5 not to be in the same street as

    (to be completely different, usually worse, in quality than.) vera gjörólíkur

    English-Icelandic dictionary > not to be in the same street as

  • 6 quality

    ['kwoləti]
    plural - qualities; noun
    1) (the extent to which something has features which are good or bad etc, especially features which are good: We produce several different qualities of paper; In this firm, we look for quality rather than quantity; ( also adjective) quality goods.) gæði
    2) (some (usually good) feature which makes a person or thing special or noticeable: Kindness is a human quality which everyone admires.) eiginleiki

    English-Icelandic dictionary > quality

  • 7 shape

    [ʃeip] 1. noun
    1) (the external form or outline of anything: People are all (of) different shapes and sizes; The house is built in the shape of a letter L.) lögun, form
    2) (an indistinct form: I saw a large shape in front of me in the darkness.) svipur, form
    3) (condition or state: You're in better physical shape than I am.) ástand, ásigkomulag
    2. verb
    1) (to make into a certain shape, to form or model: She shaped the dough into three separate loaves.) móta
    2) (to influence the nature of strongly: This event shaped his whole life.) móta
    3) ((sometimes with up) to develop: The team is shaping (up) well.) þróast, æxlast
    - shapeless
    - shapelessness
    - shapely
    - shapeliness
    - in any shape or form
    - in any shape
    - out of shape
    - take shape

    English-Icelandic dictionary > shape

См. также в других словарях:

  • different than — See different from, different than, different to …   Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • Different Than You — Single by The Exies from the album A Modern Way of Living with the Truth Recorded 2006 …   Wikipedia

  • different from / different than —    Different from is the standard usage when comparing two things: Suzie s sweater is different from Mary s. Don t say, Different than something else …   Confused words

  • different from / different than —    Different from is the standard usage when comparing two things: Suzie s sweater is different from Mary s. Don t say, Different than something else …   Confused words

  • different from, different than, different to — The first two of these expressions are widely used, but different from is preferred by careful, educated writers and speakers: This specimen is different from (not than) that. Unfortunately, but correctly, different from often leads to extra… …   Dictionary of problem words and expressions

  • Nice is Different Than Good — Desperate Housewives episode Danny Bolen ( …   Wikipedia

  • different — 1. Fowler wrote in 1926 that insistence ‘that different can only be followed by from and not by to is a superstition’. It is in fact a 20c superstition that refuses to go away, despite copious evidence for the use of to and than dating back to… …   Modern English usage

  • than — [than] conj. [ME than, thene, thonne < OE thenne, thanne, thonne, orig., then: for IE base see THAT] 1. introducing the second element in a comparison, following an adjective or adverb in the comparative degree: if the first element is a… …   English World dictionary

  • different — ► ADJECTIVE 1) not the same as another or each other. 2) distinct; separate. 3) informal novel and unusual. DERIVATIVES differently adverb differentness noun. USAGE There is little difference in sense between di …   English terms dictionary

  • Different — Dif fer*ent, a. [L. differens, entis, p. pr. of differre: cf. F. diff[ e]rent.] 1. Distinct; separate; not the same; other. Five different churches. Addison. [1913 Webster] 2. Of various or contrary nature, form, or quality; partially or totally… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • different — adj. 1) basically, entirely, radically different 2) different from, than (AE), to (BE) USAGE NOTE: Some purists consider only different from to be correct. Note that when a clause follows, than becomes a conjunction, but from and to remain… …   Combinatory dictionary

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